Description
Traces the evolving musical reputations of Haydn and Mozart, evaluating a wide range of scholarship, biography, criticism and fiction.
About the Author
Simon P. Keefe is James Rossiter Hoyle Chair of Music at the University of Sheffield and a life member of the Academy for Mozart Research at the International Mozart Foundation in Salzburg. He is the author of four previous books on Mozart, including Mozart's Requiem: Reception, Work, Completion (Cambridge, 2012), which won the 2013 Marjorie Weston Emerson Award, and a major musical biography Mozart in Vienna: the Final Decade (Cambridge, 2017), and editor of a further seven volumes for Cambridge University Press, including Mozart Studies, Mozart Studies 2 and Mozart in Context.
Reviews
"This enlightening volume mines an astonishing array of source materials to trace the intertwining legacies of Haydn and Mozart from the 1790s to 1914. The vast trove of information assembled here, all meticulously organized and elegantly explained, uncovers converging and diverging reception histories. Its commanding narrative provides a compelling and most welcome reinterpretation of Haydn's legacy alongside Mozart's that will surely influence generations to come." Caryl Clark, Professor of Music, University of Toronto
"In this important book, Simon Keefe traces a compelling joint historiography of Haydn and Mozart, with a biographer's eye for detail and a chronicler's grasp of the sweep of time. Deftly navigating a rich variety of period sources, he uses a wide-angle lens to challenge monolithic tendencies in well-known "master narratives" and reveals the long nineteenth century as a vital context for understanding Haydn and Mozart today." Jessica Waldoff, Professor of Music, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester
Book Information
ISBN 9781009254373
Author Simon P. Keefe
Format Hardback
Page Count 320
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 660g
Dimensions(mm) 250mm * 172mm * 17mm